"That our actions do not meet the depravity of terrorism does
not justify them. Since when have terrorists provided the moral
standard against which we judge ourselves?"--Waleed Aly,
Melbourne lawyer [1]
Last Tuesday, I attended the funeral of my wife’s aunt Jean
Sollosy in Humboldt, Saskatchewan. The church service ended up with
what Aunty Jean wanted, the singing of "Let there be peace" by
Daniel O’Donnell. At this time of social confusion there was nothing
better but to celebrate life with the singing of peace.
I heard Thursday (November 11) that ‘coalition’ troops have found
hostage slaughterhouses in Falluja.[2] I also understand that
Americans have so far liberated Iraq by killing some 100,000 Iraqi
civilians[3] at a current cost of some 1,100 American soldiers. The
Bush administration wants to install the Free Market in Iraq so that
Iraq can become the epicenter where the freedom of the Free Market
will spread all across the Middle East and the Muslim world.[4] In
the crazy world of the Bushes the sanitized killing of 100,000 Iraqi
civilians doesn’t count; instead, the finding of hostage
slaughterhouses becomes the focus of a new additional evil.
The fact is that Iraq is being reduced to rubbles by American
bombs and that the Halliburtons make billions of dollars[5] as they
increase the Gross Domestic Product (GDP). For me, it is natural to
see the current correlation between the waging of social violence
and the pursuing of ever greater GDP, yet conventional economists
cannot validate this correlation since their only focus is the
increase of an ever higher GDP number.
In order to understand the idiocy of ever pursuing a higher GDP
number we need to understand that a destroyed car, because of a
traffic accident for example, becomes a source of GDP when it is
repaired, and we have to understand that ultimately, a destroyed
country like Iraq becomes a source of GDP even before this same
country is repaired. Now, maybe, we can understand the absurdity of
waging preemptive wars[6] and increase the GDP number.
Sometime
ago I mentioned how financier George Soros created his Open Society
Institute[7] to promote democratic values. It is important to point
out that Soros created his foundation only after he made sure he had
more than enough money to provide for the needs of himself and of
his own family. The key to promoting democratic values is associated
therefore with the concept of satisfying our need to feel alive.
There was no need for the Bush administration to attack Iraq since
Iraq was not a threat to America. In attacking Iraq, Bush has been
responsible for the killing of American and Iraqi lives, and in so
doing, Bush has destroyed that country and undermined democracy all
over the world.
There are many social problems which can be readily understood
under the broader light of social "need". Instead, we focus on
whatever is the democracy of selfish politics, on whatever is the
enlightenment of "focus groups", on whatever is the scientific
conclusion of any focused statistical study, on whatever is a
certain focused distraction from the real reality, that is our
social need to live in peace.
At the end of Aunty Jean’s funeral service we were able take home
some of her flowers and we are enjoying them today on Remembrance
Day.
References
1. Aly, Waleed How many dead innocent Iraqis is too many?
November 9, 2004 The Age,
http://fairuse.1accesshost.com/news2/age14.htm
2. Associated Press Hostage slaughterhouses’ found in Fallujah.
Iraqi general says troops found records of captives (pdf)
November 10, 2004 http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6451731/
3. Ritter, Scott The War on Iraq Has Made Moral Cowards of Us
All: More than 100,000 Iraqis have died-and where is our shame and
rage? November 1, 2004 The Guardian http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/110304F.shtml
4. White House President Bush Discusses Importance of Democracy
in Middle East February 4, 2004 http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2004/02/20040204-4.html
5. Halliburton Watch http://www.halliburtonwatch.org/
6. Daalder, Ivo H. and James Lindsay The Preemptive-War Doctrine
has Met an Early Death in May 30, 2004 Iraq Los Angeles Times
http://www.brookings.edu/views/op-ed/daalder/20040530.htm
7. Open Society Institute http://www.soros.org/ |